tenpens
Ten Pens
tenpens

I'm going to hate watch the pilot. Just for the lolz—and the hate.

Maybe they should have let the CW do it; the CW did a pretty good job of bringing back The Flash.

*Raises hand eagerly

I was certain of my recollection, but I went back and watched the episode just for you, Hornacek. The scene in question begins at 15:03; seconds later, Savage is busy taking out Nazis when (at 15:33) a stream of flame appears out of nowhere. The next frame shows Mick Rory taking out two Nazis—the same Nazis who were sh

If you read my original comment more carefully, you will see that I wrote that the legends attacked the Nazis, which they did. The Nazis were shooting at Savage, not at the legends; but then the "legends" came and started fighting the Nazis (instead of going after Savage, who presumably represented the greater

Who did it better: William Shatner or Zachary Quinto?

So glad I'm not going to have to pay to see Terminator Genisys. I kind of wanted to see what Matt Smith does in it, but I didn't care enough to throw my money at this movie. Now I'll have my chance. Patience is a virtue.

Shocking and sad. I could hardly believe it was true. I'm sorry that it is.

I spent the weekend moving and recovering from a move—plus I've been away from the Interwebs for a bit—so I am just finding out that Anton Yelchin died. Shocking. Sad.

No, they were shooting at Vandal Savage because he stood in the road in front of their convoy.

I second your emotion. I'd like to see more heroines as well; I hate that the first female Pixar heroine/central protagonist had to have magic sprinkled all over her. Dory is okay, as heroines go, but she's been bumped up from sidekick duty. Let's see an original heroine just as interesting as Remy in Ratatouille and

Um, no. He's not my type.

I admit to knowing next to nothing about John Cena. :)

I think Sam Neill was the only good thing about this movie.

When I first saw Lost World, I hated it. Probably because I had read the novel first. Now I like the movie and dislike the novel. At least in the movie Malcolm wants to leave the island post haste so as to get his daughter to safety. In the book, he blithely agrees to stay on the island with his two young charges in

Also, in the novel, the compys' saliva had some kind of narcotic effect, slowing the prey down and dulling its senses. Too bad no one mentioned this in the film.

I always assumed it got in when Nedry hit his head on the jeep and fell backwards. When he gets up, he jumps into the jeep and slams the door shut. Thinking about it, though, it doesn't make sense that it would clamber over him to get into the car and then attack instead of tearing into him while he was flat on his

And then Ian Malcolm rubs his side of the windshield because he can't see what's happening. Comedy in the midst of abject terror. Love it.

I'm with you. While I was young enough that I don't remember 95% of the content of the old Doctor Who episodes I watched on PBS as a kid, I don't see why a romance between the Doctor and a human companion should ever be part of the story. I think it's more interesting when there isn't. I can kind of understand his

I guess I'm one of the few people who finds it extremely implausible and even off-putting that the Doctor gets romantically involved with Rose. In fact, the more I think about it, the more off-putting it is. An alien who's over 900 years of age falling in love with a 19-year-old girl? Oh, yeah, that totally makes